News & Current Events
Emotional Father Discovers Boy’s Body While Searching For Missing Daughter In Texas Floods
A distraught father, whose daughter is currently listed as one of the several people missing due to the floods in Texas, has described how his search resulted in the unintentional discovery of a small child’s body.
According to officials, the Guadalupe River rose 26 feet in 45 minutes after an unexpected storm during the July 4 weekend deposited an incredible 15 inches of rain into the river. Emergency personnel have rescued 850 people from the Texas floodwaters, but 82 Texans have died and 41 are still believed to be missing.
Ten children and one counsellor have gone missing after Camp Mystic, a Christian girls’ camp located along the Guadalupe River, flooded, and rescue crews are currently searching for them around-the-clock.
Ty Badon is a distressed father who is still searching for his missing child.

After hearing nothing from his daughter Joyce Badon, 21, for days, Badon and her brother travelled to Hunt, Texas, in an attempt to locate the college-aged woman.
Badon told CNN that he and his son “stumbled” across a child’s body after yelling out his daughter’s name.
It is known that the unnamed child was ensnared in the devastating flash floods.
“My son and I were walking and I thought it was a mannequin. It was a little boy, 8 or 10 years old, and he was dead,” Badon explained.
“We were just walking, doing the same thing we were doing when we stumbled across him.”
“Hopefully we can find our children, my daughter and her friends alive,” he added.
During the show, Badon asked CNN viewers to “pray” for his family before praising the “excellent work” being done by those at Ingram Elementary School in spite of the bad weather.
“They’re the place where all the survivors are brought and we were hoping to hear our daughter and friends names call, but they never did call. So, we said ‘we’re going to come out and find them ourselves’.”
Joyce was a “beautiful, wonderful girl,” the pleased father continued, adding that he couldn’t have hoped for a “better” child.
Before the Guadalupe River overflowed its banks, Joyce and her three friends—Ella Cahill, Aidan Heartfield, and Reese Manchaca—were living in a house by the river, according to publications.
The house where the foursome, who have not yet been located, were staying is reportedly “no longer there.”
In a statement shared on Saturday (July 5), Kerr County Sheriff Larry Leitha said, “We continue to have hundreds of first responders on the ground, air and water in the process of search and rescue.”
Some Texas officials have accused the National Weather Service (NWS) of lacking warnings about the unfavourable weather because of budget cuts imposed by the Trump administration.
It is acknowledged that several posts at the San Angelo and San Antonio local NWS offices were unfilled.
A warning coordination meteorologist was one of them. According to the New York Times, the individual who held this position before departed earlier this year after accepting an early retirement package provided by the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE).
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